The Caxton Club is a private social club and bibliophilic society founded in Chicago in 1895 to promote the book arts and the history of the book. To further its goals, the club hosts monthly events, collaborates with institutions like the Newberry Library, and publishes works including The Caxtonian. The Caxton Club is a member club of the Fellowship of American Bibliophilic Societies.

History

The Caxton Club was founded in 1895 by a group of fifteen bibliophiles to support the publication of fine books in the style of the then-new Arts and Crafts Movement. The club's name honors the fifteenth-century English printer William Caxton. The founders included John Vance Cheney, Edward E. Ayer, Martin A. Ryerson, James Ellsworth, Charles L. Hutchinson, and Washington Irving Way and Chauncey L. Williams (of Way & Williams).

In 1976, women began to be admitted as members of the Caxton Club, departing from the era's common gentlemen's clubs practices. Mary Beth Beal is notable for being the Caxton Club’s first female President in 1985-1986.

In 1995 the Caxton Club centenary was celebrated with publication of The Caxton Club, 1895–1995: Celebrating a Century of the Book in Chicago which has been characterized as a "significant addition to the history of American bibliophily."

The Club published several fine editions in partnership with the Lakeside Press of Chicago.

The Club awards scholarships and grants to students and researchers in the book arts.

Notable members

Sydney E. Berger—educator, librarian, rare books expert Thomas Kimball Brooker - book collector, businessman Gwendolyn Brooks – author, poet Francis Fisher Browne – editor Lee Pierce Butler – bibliographer, librarian, professor Michèle V. Cloonan - librarian, professor John Y. Cole - founding director of the Center for the Book at the Library of Congress Charles Deering - businessman, art collector, philanthropist Robert B. Downs - librarian, author Alexander Wilson Drake – artist, collector, critic James Ellsworth – banker, industrialist Charles Lang Freer – art collector, industrialist, philanthropist Herman H. Fussler-Librarian, Dean of the University of Chicago Graduate Library School Michael Gorman – librarian Frederic Goudy - printer, artist and type designer Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden – book collector and scholar Nancy Gwinn - director Smithsonian Libraries Theodore Wesley Koch - librarian, translatorHenry Eduard Legler – activist, librarian Frank Orren Lowden25th governor of Illinois, United States representative IL, candidate Republican presidential nominations 1920, 1928 Beverly Lynch - librarian William Mulliken – Olympic swimmer Kenneth Nebenzahl - antiquarian book- and mapseller, author, supporter and benefactor of history of cartography. Audrey Niffenegger – author and artist Stanley Pargellis - Director of the Newberry Library, 1942 to 1962 Lawrence Clark Powell -librarian Sarah M. Pritchard – librarian Carl B. Roden – librarian Ralph Fletcher Seymour – artist, author, publisher David Spadafora - historian, President, Newberry Library Vincent Starrett – author and newspaperman Peggy Sullivan - library historian, librarian Robert Wedgeworth – librarian and executive Frank Lloyd Wright – architect

Publications

In the course of its history, the Caxton Club has published formal publications and other printed pieces. These include The French Bookbinders of the Eighteenth Century, The Cowboy in American Literature by J. Frank Dobie, Tales for Bibliophiles. and Imaginary Books and Libraries.

A complete listing of the publications is available here: .

See also

Further reading

  • Crowder, Courtney (December 16, 2013). . Chicago Tribune.
  • Piehl, Frank (1995). The Caxton Club, 1895–1995: Celebrating a Century of the Book in Chicago. Chicago: Caxton Club. ISBN0-940550-09-1.
  • The Caxton Club (2018). . Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

External links